Redistricting, pejoratively, gerrymandering, has been a problem since 1776. However, ranked choice voting is a remedy to gerrymandering.
Redistricting (Gerrymandering) articles on Democracy Chronicles
Redistricting, also known pejoratively as gerrymandering, refers to manipulation of the redrawing of districts to skew results towards a preferred party or candidate. With changes in population over time as cities grow and shrink, representative democracy requires adjusting border lines between electoral areas. For national elections, the U.S. Constitution outlines the need for a ten-year population count by census for national elections. The 50 states often have their own methods of redistricting. Also see our section on American democracy.
Redistricting and the Fight for Fair Maps
Although the goal of redistricting is to represent population increase, communities of color are at risk of being overlooked.
Ranked Voting May Offer Courts A Way To Fix Redistricting
Courts impose ranked-choice voting to remedy redistricting. It permits courts to correct redistricting without creating too many districts.
Nine Redistricting Cases That Shaped History
Over the last few decades, courts have played a critical role in redistricting, ensuring that districts are fair and representational of residents.
How Best To Mitigate Prison Gerrymandering
Eleven states have now pledged to using data on former prisoner home addresses to locate them for the purposes of gerrymandering.
Let the Gerrymandering (and the Legal Battles) Begin
The Census Bureau will release statistics Thursday, kicking off a major redistricting dispute that could determine who controls Congress.
Partisan Battle Over Maryland Redistricting Likely
When Maryland’s legislative districts are reconfigured this year, it will be the first time in decades that the governor is a Republican.
Redistricting: How GOP reaped biggest advantage in decades
Republicans drew voting districts on census data giving them a political advantage in more states than either party has enjoyed in decades.
Ohio Has Chance To Fix Lopsided District Map
In the past Ohio’s elections have leaned right, but its electoral outcomes can’t be explained by narrow margins or a gradual end.
What Redistricting Looks Like In Every State
Congressional redistricting will be the most critical element in the 2022 midterms. Where will each party acquire clout? Lose it?